Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

superkoning t1_jac7564 wrote

>Tho, it's not that common in modern day native Swedish words, no.

I thought so: "vattenfall" is waterfall / Wasserfall / waterval. So in Swedish a v is used where other Germanic languages use a w?

Next question: is there a "v" pronounced as a soft f in Swedish?

2

Shudnawz t1_jac9cgl wrote

Yeah, Swedish v is basically German w.

About a soft f, not that comes to mind right now. But that said, I'm no linguist or language teacher.

1